w N Legislators approve ASU funds Ey Britton P h — i The A rizona House of R ep resen tativ es passed yesterday the capital outlay bill for the state’s universities, despite a last-minute dogfight which threatened to kill any such appropriations this year. H ie Senate is now debating tiie bill, which wfll give ASH $1,605,000, UofA $487,000 and NAU $317,800. Capital outlay appropriations are used to fund r the Appropriations Committee, according to Rep. Ju an ita Harelson, R-Tempe. Goodwin1objected when W est tried to increase ASU’s allocation to $2 million, approximately the same as the UofA’s appropriation for the year, which included an earlier $1.1 million given to the UofA to furnish its library, Harelson said. “It’s not fair,” she said, and added th at ASU’s need for money is a t least as great as thè UofA’s The animosity .between W est and Goòdwin probably began last year when W est made charges that the UofA administration new-buildings and repair existing facilities. A legislative battle killed the original capital outlay bill requesting $1,505,000 for ASU, $785,000 for the .UofA and $544,800 for NAU. H ie original bill ran into trouble when a long standing feud between Rep. Tody W est, R -Phoenix, and R ep. Tom Goodwin, R-Tucson broke put in A summer ■föb state. pm * J* T House Republicans resented this ,kind of manipulation and tried to get back at Goodwin by voting against UofA ap­ propriations, she said. By W ednesday m orning, however, legislators realized that money for ASU was “ab­ solutely necessary,’’ and Goodwin accepted a cut in the UofA’s allotment in order to fund needed appropriations for the other universities, Harelson said. gÉL m ¿fitr < M 3£ n * v m* ï 'ZáÉtBtk f ,* thursday K L * ku&u. Arizona State University m m J Vol.1 No.4, June 24, 1976 Faculty and staff will receive raises 3 f ■iO ^' ' -_ • . '' ^ * The Arizona legislature has approved and sent to Gov. Raul Castro a total operating budget of $47,380,000 for ASU, a cut of over $4 million from the original University request. The legislature afeo approved eightper cent cost-of-living raises for state employes, which will mean $3.6 million to $3.8 million for ASU faculty and staff. Included in the ASU appropriation is $638,600 to be paid as merit increases. But the figure is only half of the original request for m erit raises, according to Chuck Williams, senior budget analyst for the legislature’s University Budget Committee. M erit increases are normally a 5 per cent raise given to people who qualify by doing excellent work. By reducing the amount available for merit raises, administrators can either give half the qualified number the full 5 per cent or give all qualified workers 2.5 per cent raises. The reduced amount will mean fewer people will receive merit raises, Williams said. The final determination of who will get the raises and how much they will receive will be made by ASU ad­ m inistrators, he said. ASU’s original request for $51,455,700, while the legislative staff recommended $47,517,100, Williams said. Further legislative modifications included an additional 17 support staff positions and the reduction of m erit rafees, Williams said. Legislative sources said they expect the governor to sign the appropriation bill. beer, m * 'B ; » XA, B a -^ rr> ►1 \ » i * (l ■> h i'* : 4 \ I.J r mm1 W È & ÌS F S s S ;* * '* R iver runners Salt River tubers don’t know how dan­ gerous the popular pastime can be, according to sheriff’s deputies. Three ByPaiPealsy O ther hospitals in Mesa, Tempe and Scottsdale receive some injured tubers most weekends. No hospital emergency room charges less than $15 plus doctors fees. A few tubers, perhaps more than a* few, will panic when caught in deceptively, swift currents. Quite possibly someone will drown. When that happens, sheriffs deputies, members of a special squad called the lake patrol, wfll search and dive for the body. Three river-goers have drowned this year, according to the sheriffs department. The la te st victim died Saturday. He was Ralph Edward Ohman, 28, of 1005 W; Adams in Phoenix. a » ti&k Ohman was with friends and relatives a t about 3:80 p.m. in the Blue P rint campground near the Salt River bridge where most tubers start trips. W itnesses fold sheriff’s deputies Ohman .sat in the river to cool off and had been drinking. When he tried to swim across the river Ohman got in trouble with the current and was washed downstream, towards, witnesses say, a group of tubers. Ohman’s companions shouted for the tubers to help him, and according to witnesses, they indicated they would. But no one aided Ohman, and his body was located Sunday morning. A lthough deputies w ere unable to find any of the tubers : accused of callous inaction, they Photo by Hal DeKeyser drowning on the river have been reported this year. Injuries are common, deputies say. Tubers face river dangers Each sum m er w eekend thousands of people, mostly young, many students, gather beer, suntan lotion and inner tubes and head for the Salt and Verde Rivers east of Phoenix. Most will have fun floating in brisk w ater under a scorching sun. But many will run into trouble. They will scrape and bruise against rocks, cut themselves on branches, step on broken glass or seriously overexpose in the sun. The n e arest hospital emergency rooms — a t Mesa L utheran and S cottsdale Memorial — report an average of several riv e r 1in ju ries p e r weekend, mostly cuts and severe sunburn. Hospital personnel advise shoes mid shirts for protection. to get his own propositions through committee, Harelson said. ¿MM Tempe, Arizona Sunburns, cuts, beer OD's was evasive and supplied inaccurate inform ation in response to an investigatimi of financial mismanagement and accounWog practices at the UofA, m relson said. A House investigating com­ m ittee, led by Speaker Stan Akers, R-Phoenix, found the charges had no- real merit, Harrison said, but the tensiop between W est and Goodwin grew. Other Republicans^ in the House began to resent Goodwin because of “fancy footwork” he did to get his legislation passed, such as maneuvering to set up conflicting committee meetings say they are amazed that with the large number of tubers in the area, no one even3 reported seeing a swimmer in trouble. U ntil a man called late Saturday evening to say that after thinking about it, he decided he better report seeing a man’s head and hand under water that afternoon. He didn’t say why he waited to call. “This all made me furious," said LA. Ozzie Morris, a com­ mander of the eastern district of Maricopa County. “I’ve heard that in New York people watch people get stabbed and robbed but not here.” Deputies were involved in another ">8«hq> Sunday morning searching'for the body. A police helicopter passed over three tubers and happened to observe sun them being sw ept under brandies. Two emerged apparently OK but the third, a girl, was slow to pop out of the water. She finally draped herself over her tube and the copter was waved on by one of her companions. A second copter following noticed the girl’s head dangling in the w ater and attem pted to use the force of its rotor to blow the tubes to shore. Other tubers didn’t realize the girf s plight and took offense. Then a man on shore threw a beer can at the copter, a federal crime, for any object striking a moving rotor will likely cause the copter to plummit wildly. He wasn’t arrested but told sheriffs he misunderstood the . continued page 2 Page 2 Sum m er S tate Press June 2 4 ,1 9 7 6 More about JL f 'Q .tl Tubers face dangers continued from page 1 situation. “He damn near got shot,” said Morris. The girl was quite fll, but after being taken to a hospital decided not to check in, deputies said. Last Sunday was an unusually rough day with several serious injuries, Morris said. He said 25 deputies patrolling the river area were busy with: a guy who split Ids head diving off a cliff, a woman who w andered and collapsed in the desert near the river after losing her party, a head-on collision, a pistol whipping, and a hitchhiker stuck in the head with a bottle thrown from a passing car. On Saturday a girl’s back waa injured when someone jumped on her from a cliff. Morris said that with 18 years on the job he knows the speed of the current is deceptive, and tubers can quickly be sucked into whirlpools and under branches. Hazards lie under the w ater too, he said. Tubers can bump heads on rocks, step on glass or collide with sharp sticks. “T hat riv e r is ' really dangerous,” Morris said. He described the other two river deaths this year, added to six last year. On Memorial Day, a 19-yearold woman got out of the w ater at Blue Point. “She jumped back­ wards, missed her tube, went 6743 E. McDowell Rd. (Corner 68th.St.) accordingly, I think we could under and didn’t come up.” On June 4, a nine-year-old boy turn it into a pretty safe river*" drowned. "The current sucked Morris said. He recommends: him and his tube under the w ater,” and he became tangled in ¥ — limit alcohol, drugs on river, branches, Morris said. — respect the current, realize When a deputy was working to itw fast, free the body later, Morris said, — lode ahead for whirlpools, a teenage girl was similarly sucked under right in front of rocks, entanglements, — don’t go at all if you’re not a him. The deputy dove in and good swimmer. freed her, Morris said, and the T m not saying don’t have a shaken girl continued her float good time, just be mindful of without pause. what’s around you.” Morris said all lake deputies Sgt. Grover Gardner, the including some volunteers — the officer who leads the lake patrol patrol includes all lakes in squad, makes other points. eastern Maricopa County —>are "Organize your trip. We’re out certified paramedics and scuba there at 1 a.m. looking for divers. All men drive four-wheel separated tubers.” He suggested vehicles carrying resicitatars on calling the sheriff’s office in Mesa patrols along the river and or the forest service for in­ through campgrounds, he said. formation on the river, and that A Departm ent of Public Safety people pick up maps of the river helicopter to transport seriously (available in the MU bookstore). injured is kept on standby during In what may be a surprise to the season, he said. Ambulances many tubers, Gardner said,' are not kept in the area, he said, "Don’t tie your tubes together. but are ready a t the nearest That’s the worst thing you can hospitals. do. You can get hung up on Sheriff’s departm ent records bridge abutments, rocks and show 54 injured-person calls up branches. One person can get until June 18 this year, with hung up and mess up the others. “People are not aware of the most coming after April when hot w eather arrived. An average force of the river," Gardner said. of 10 calls per week is expected He added th a t friends of drowning victims often tell • now, deputies said. “If everybody knew th at this deputies, “He was a good was a deadly river and acted swimmer.” Getting interview first goal of employment-seeker today “Tim hardest job in the world is getting a job,” says Nancy Sawhney, an ASU career services advisor who claims the p rim ary goal of today’s job-seeker should be the employment interview. “Out of 50 people who may apply for the ««mo job, only about four or five will be called in for an interview,” she said. According to the advisor, the written application provides a first impression; therefore all paper work must be done neatly and concisely. “Paper work gets you an interview; an interview gets you the job.” “If you’re one of the lucky ones and are called in for an interview . . get ¡Prepared,” says Sawhney. “Nothing can be worse than finding yourself in an interview situation and being asked by the interviewer to; T ell me aU you know about our company,’ ’’ she said. . .. x , An applicant’s reaction to this type of o r s PLANNING A PARTY? ■ Call us, m oftar — , • • • • • Cold Keg Beer & Equipment Liquor • Ice • Ceee Discounts Fine Wines & Champagne W ine W eil — Chilis W ine in 3-6 M in. Convenient Drive-in Window 947-2352 PAPA JAY'S M on. Ihm Thurs. A uthentic N e w York < PIZZA ,k, Ä ndw. THICK CRUST — A ll our Pizza* hand madol TAKE OUT OR EAT IN TRY OUR DELICIOUS DINNERS & SUBMARINES Open 4 P.M.-1 A.M. Sen.-lbim. 4 P.M.-2 A.M. M.-Set. SERVING MICHELOB COORS • BUDWEISER • SCHLITZ We Deliver Beer! 804 S. ASH, TEM PE % Blk. S. of University NEW) O am * Room! NEWI FREE DELIVERY AFTER 6 P .M . 967-9689 now y O U con drive a racing carl e ^ question is immediate panic (if not prepared) and the reaction of an in­ terviewer to an unprepared individual is always negative, she adds. In her job with ASU, Sawhfiey advises stu d en ts to thoroughly research prospective employers prior to the in­ terview. Information such as the com­ pany’s size, structure, products and services can be obtained by reading the firm’s annual report or recruitment brochure, she says. The day of the interview, dress, think, act and look like a professional, suggests Sawhney. Arrive at the interview site 10 to 15 minutes early and use the time to mentally prepare. ... . “Carry a pen, spare resumes outlining previous work experience, career ob­ jective, and personal background in­ formation, and take along names and phone numbers of references,” she said; Student-Discount e GRAND P R IX GRAND PRIX FORMULA I RACING 1616 N. Hayden Rd., Tem pe 949-7265 FOUR LAPS FO R ONLY $2.00 W ITH T H IS AD A N D STUDENT I.D . V alid drivers license required- Lim it 1 ad per person. O ffer expires July 7 ,1 9 7 6 STP 6-76 ******* *************************** I V isit Our N ew Store 5* ____ NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY $3000 MICROSCOPE ON DISPLAY * *IColonial Ice Cream*I • • • • SUNDAES CO N ES * HANDPA CKED ICE C R EAM SHAKES Choose From Over 45 Delicious Flavors f 915 E. Broadway, Tampa 966-8950 In the Lucky Shopping Center ~ ; 2 j Open From 11 AM to 10 PM X********AA*** **************** ***l | SPECIAL! WITH THIS COUPON | j | ^ Double Scoop Sundae - Your Choice of Topping 49 >• Reg. 85* (ipvwu h u m . nug< •«,, 1976] iw w j • [Good Thru. Aug. IS £ * i 4 î ig ***★ **★ ★ ★ *★ *★ ★ *★ ★ ★ ★ *A * * * * * * A * * * ★ ★ * j k W s t y lu s , N& c a r t r id g e & t u r n t a b le ^ ■ CLINIC A u dio Specialists w ill check your stylus cartridge and turntable F R E E I And present you w ith a free g ift o f a stylus pressure gauge. W hy ruin yo u r fin e record collection? Have you r equipm ent checked o u t now — F R E E ! And pick up you r free g ift. TEMPE McCLINTOCK AT SOUTHERN 838-3611 Clinic held Monday to Friday A U D IO mSwmm June 2 4 ,1 9 7 6 Sum m er S tate Press Page 3 Starsky denied speed-up o f reinstatem ent hearings he Marine Officer Selection Team W ill Be On Campue B y Jim Boardman Starsky lost again. Dr. Morris Starsky, the professed Socialist who was fired by the Arizona Board of Regents in 1970, lost his bid Monday to have his reinstatement case expedited. U.S. District Court Judge Carl Muecke told Starsky’s lawyer Alan Kyman to write his congressman. The judge said the courts are overloaded. Starsky, a former assistant professor of philosophy at ASU, was fired after he dismissed a class to speak at an anti-war rally a t the UofA. Two faculty committees and the university president recommended against his dismissal, but on June 10,1970, the 42-year-old rabble-rouser and out­ spoken educator, was fired by the regents for alleged misconduct. Kyman asked the judge to expedite the case because his client can’t find per­ manent work. He’s parked cars in Los Angeles and had a temporary post at San Diego State during the 1970-71 school year, but it’s been mostly odd jobs for the odd professor. Starsky began his battle in the courts in July 1970, when he sued the regents for violating his constitutional rights. He Won. Judge Muecke ruled the regents violated Starsky’s First Amendment rights. The regents appealed. In February 1975, more than five years after the rally, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Muecke’s decision. But the court sent the case back to Muecke to consider a new regent argument. The board said Starsky signed a “ter­ minal sabbatical leave’’ contract in 1970. The regents contend Starsky relinquished His right to reinstatm ent by signing the document. No trail date has been set. Criminal cases have so clogged the courts, that an attorney with a civil ease ready to go right now would have to wait at least a year before he could hope to have the case slated. The next trial will decide whether the regents waited too long (five years) to bring up the contract, and if not, whether the 42-year-old thorn-in-the-okole of the regents gave up his right to sue when he signed the pact. Prof studies bees'mating habits; cruisers and bruisers score best For-the past two years. D r. John Alcock has been resear­ ching the reproductive strategies of male and female bees in order to answ er some im portant biological questions about behavioral traits unique to Centris pallida (large, grey, solitary bees). The ASU associate professor Of zoology recently was awarded a $15,000 g ra n t from th e National Science Foundation to . continue his study. He • says , m ale m ating stra teg ies of th e bee are dependent upon size and fighting ability, and size variation may determine certain behavioral characteristics. Alcock claims that male C. pallida have the capacity to locate virgin females before they em erge from places of developm ent (cells) in th e ground. The larger males are able to dig through one to two centimenters of hard-packed soil to reach virgin females' as they burrow up from their un­ derground cells, then mate with them as soon as they are un­ covered. The smaller individuals, says Alcock, tend to hover by bushes or flowering shrubs surrounding emergence areas and pursue unmated airborne females. His research should help explain the scarcity of large male bees. I t also should determine the frequency of mating by in­ dividual nudes; the relative length of survival of individuals of different sizes; mm! if some males are able to employ both mate location strategies (digging and hovering). To assess the rigidity of male behavior among C. pallida, Alcock,. along with student assistants Fled Lindstrom, P at Ryan, Kathy Opfenring, David' P o st and T erry P onders, collected and marked a large num ber of “dig g ers" and “hoverers” with flourescent poster paint. • If you can’t stop by and see us on campus, write or call at: 261-3880 Capt. George E. WETMORE III 317 N. Central Ave., Rm. 208 Phoenix, AZ 85004 Setife Cenere JEWELRY By George 618 S. 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IF HBDOESNTTURNUP FORMS OWN B ILL, IP S D EA D ! IMeRB A T TrtJTP W ARMTH f% n Z t JAPANAGAIN. iJH W K . m r (1 S lLft-H z sTI EP, I CANT BE THERE, T H fffc A U TH E R S /S T O /T.-I.. TKNO W YOUNEEDA QUORUM, BUT I'V E 1 GOTANOTHER...WELL, THE ■ COMMITTEE HALL JUSTA HAUE TO. fl m A U RIGHT,A U RIGHT! IU BE THERE! BUT YOUOWEME, E D -Ü M G0W 6T0 HAVE TOBREAK OFFA K EY M&TTN6 W ITH THEAMBASSA­ DOR FROM IR A N ! J v in „ a/IMM! YEAH,GETM E I THOUGHT THE GOLDEN SHEWASFROM KEYMOTEL! CHICAGO. TRAN? ? í fff ê#> vvv IT TSt June 2 4 ,1 9 7 6 Sum m er S ta te Press Page 5 Female vets may g et back pay Married female veterans who attended school under the 6.1. Bill between June 1, 1966 and Oct. 24,1972, may be eligible to receive retroactive pay for their depen­ dent husbands. .0 Connie Wilson, a veterans counselor in th e ASU G.I. Bill office, said eligible women must file for the retroactive pay' quickly, as the cutoff date for applying is July 1. The pay may be as much as $30 per month for each month the eligible veteran attended school. During the applicable period, married women veterans were not eligible to receive the increased allowance for married persons, Wilson said. Only married male veterans received the ad­ ditional allowance. In 1972, a federal law was passed making married veterans eligible for increased benefits on an equal basis. A recent ruling by the V eterans A dm inistration made the benefits retroactive to June 1,1966. The retroactive pay does not apply to married women who were attending school under World War II or Korean conflict G.I. Bills. Female veterans in school duringjhe applicable period whose husbands were disabled have already been paid the ad­ ditional amount. Women attending school after the 1972 date have also been paid. Eligible female veterans can file their claims for the retroactive pay at the V.A. regional office, 3225 N. Central (263-5411). Applications also can be .made with Doug Jacobs or Ron Buchanan, Veterans Representatives on Campus, in ASB room 303 (965-4187) or with Loren Corsberg, Director of Veterans Affairs. Teachers stereotype minority's language; English prof claims Many school teachers in England and the United S ta te s unconsciously stereotype the language of working-tlass or ethnic and racial minority children, often incorrectly turning differences of speech due to cultural environment or dialect into “deficiencies.” Dr. Robert E. Shafer, professor of English at ASU, says the stereotyping doesn't stop ju st w ith speech — it often extends into the teachers' evaluations of the “deficient” students’ overall learning potential. The professor draw s those conclusions from his “Cross-National Study of T eacher L anguage Attitudes in England and the United States,” in which he surveyed 23 British teachers from 21 schools, and 25 American teachers from 25 schools. Shafer* will p resent results of his research Saturday before the Con­ ference on the Psychology of Language at the University of Stirling, Scotland, as part of a six-week European trip the professor and his wife, Dr. Susanne M. Shafer, HYPNOSIS HELPS! IMPROVE • Memory • Concentration • Personality • Lose W eight Easily • Explore incarnate Lives POSITIVE SUGGESTION INSTITUTE LINDSAY BRADY ASU professor of secondary HYPNOTIST eduation, are making this summer. 968-90% “Ninety per cent of the British teachers and almost ♦50 per cent of the American * See For A ll Your Diamond Needs . teachers described the language of children from working-class groups and racial and ethnic minorities ) _ .... • y.'r\ „ as representing a language 11 Years Same Location — "In The Arches" deficit,” he said, adding that th e teachers prim arily blamed parental neglect, education level of parents, language of parents or the interference of social and regional dialects for the “deficits.” “Both B ritish and American teachers,” Shafer says, “saw in the language M EM BER AM ERICAN GEM SO CIETY of working-class children i and in the children of ♦ minorities the self-fulfilling B u y in g , S e llin g , A p p r a is in g , C u ttin g , R e p a ir in g prophecy that children who come to school w ith 130 E. U n iversity D r. 9 6 7 -8 9 1 7 deficiencies are bound to leave school w ith ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ deficiencies, because of the difficulties they encounter in school.” All teachers in the study expressed a need for further training for themselves in the field of applied linguistics. THE DIAMOND PEOPLE JEWELRY % DIAMOND CUTTING H iS b b o o n s . s y iT H g s a a m f GINO'S PIZZA 7 ( k Z k & o t* 9 6 6 -5 5 4 2 9 6 6 -4 6 6 6 8 2 2 S outh M ill 2 Quarts of Papal with the Purchase of a Large Pizza. ' (Request When Ordering) COUPON GOOD THROUGH JULY 7 ,1 9 7 6 GIN O'S PIZZA T d t *D€JUu€K 9 6 6 -4 6 6 6 • NEW1ES$ R4RTY if&Henns, 9 6 6 -5 5 4 2 8 2 2 South M ill Individual Size Pizza with Purchase of Same Kind of Large Pizza. (Request When Ordering) COUPON GOOD THROUGH JULY 7, 1976 PUBESFORBEST Page 6 Sum m er S tate Press June 2 4 ,1 9 7 6 DROP DEAD! N o t If Wo Can H olp It W e G ive th e F inest Preventive H ealth C are A vailable. W e A lso Do O u r Best W ith Your Present P roblem s. C om e In And T alk To Us (O r C a ll) 968-7767 COMMUNITY CHIROPRACTIC CENTER 3 9 1 0 S . Rural Road, Tem po 111 E. University Tower Center Behind Baskin-Robbins The “IN SPO T” fo r Tops and Bottom s a t R easonable Prices O veralls, P a in ter P an ts Levi & Wranglers And our ever popular Re­ cycled Denim Jeans at 4.99 and C u to ffs at 2.49 Custom Skirts Great Bargains Everyday M o n .-S at. 10-6 966-7083 There are a lot of good things . under our roof. More choices than you ever im agined. T hin ’n Crispy* pizza, Thick ’n Chewy* pizza, Cavatini* oven-baked pasta, our delicious spaghetti, our special sandw iches, and a salad w ith your ounce of dressing. We’ve got pizza, sure, but we’ve . got a lot more, to o —in food, table ser­ vice, and comfortable atm osphere. T here are a lot of good things under our foof. ASU Police are investigating recent rob­ beries of vending machines around cam­ pus. So far progress. Pop machines popped; police check suspects • ASU police have a group of suspects being "looked a t closely," in connection with, recent vending machine break-ins on campus, but a lack of evidence is making prosecution difficult, according to a campus security officer. , Detective W. F. Taylor said one suspect, a local juvenile, has previously been arrested in Phoenix for breaking into coke machines the same way campus machines have been hit, hut a lack of definite evidence has prevented prosecution. University police are not sure if the break-ins are the work of one group or several, Taylor said. ~ ~ Cigarette, candy and coke machines have been vandalized but the method of operation apparently changes, indicating more than one group may be involved; he said. Gloves are apparently being used in the coke machine break-ins, making evidence difficult to gather, he said.' It’s going to be a m atter of catching the vandals in the act, Taylor said. Spectacle ShCBB •A trademark of Pizia Hut, Inc. 0 1976 Pin« Hot, Inc. ____ o f evidence has hampered STATE PRESS is publish«) by Arizona State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam ination periods. Entered as second class m atter at Tempe, AZ 86281. -Hut Let this coupon introduce you to them Savers® This coupon is worth $2.00 off the regular price of any Pizza Hut Thick ’n Chewy pizza or Thin ’n Crispy pizza, when presented at a participating Pizza Hut restaurant listed below. Void where taxed or restricted by law. O ffer expires 6-30-76. _________Available at these participating P in a Hut restaurant!: __ _____ 9 5 5 E a s t U n iv e r s it y f t Tem pe m (Discount G ood O nly O ff Regular Price) a ft - Loan, Buy, Sell or Trade Anything of Value — NEW or USED w SAGUARO PAWN SHOP Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Radios, TVs, Furniture, Musical Instruments, Appliances, Stereos, Tools, Antiques, Golf Clubs, Guns, Typewriters, etc. U n iv e r tiH iV 8 ii* « R e * i s o c a lti» u n t à e r » ì k j r l»empe aHxona assai 966 - 944 © in Scottsdale Plaza Sp®«l«il-En90»®n*on* « n fl* 2200 N. Scottsdale Rd. Wedding Rings *34.95 & up Scottsdale Stereo Units from *29.95 (V2 block South of Oak) Phone 947-0639 June 24, t9 7 6 Sum m er S tate Press Page 7 Concert review Nils Lofgren concert lacking; backups show little promise There was only one thing numbers from Lofgren’s album, “Cry missing at this Nils Lofgren new est Tough." It seemed as if the concert Saturday night at audience’s response was the C elebrity T heatre: limited to polite applause. music. It was an evening of Only after “Beggars Day” bom bastic noise th a t, did the less-than-capacity frankly, was cerebrally crowd offer enthusiastic response. insulting. Throughout his portion of Mahogany Rush, a the concert, Lofgren th o ro u g h ly ta s te le s s paraded around the stage assem blage of talen t, with a bottle of wine, of­ opened the show. fering to asts to the This hand does all it can to audience. This tactic excited come up with a repulsive the teenage segment of the imitation of the late ’60s audience, but it seemed like Jimi Hendrix band. The a rather cheap shot. heavy metal fanatics loved Lofgren’s band sounds it, but I found it quite uncomfortable on stage, and disgusting. this may be due, in part, to F rank M arino, th e the fact that there are three guitarist, rarely ventured guitarists playing at once further than the root, third most of the time. One spends a minimal or fifth of any given chord, except by accident. He shows a little promise. The other two members of the group would probably be more successful at selling insurance. Lofgren and clan had problems from the begin­ ning. Numerous electrical problem s hindered his Save on your hard or S oflens supplies. performance. Lofgren is a gifted W rite fo r Free Sample m usician, and ■ has o f your favorite so lution . demonstrated this in such Price List w ill also be groups as Crazy Horse and sen t. ‘ |||| |j Grin. His current group has not matured enough to Contact Lens Supplies serve as a" vehicle for P.O. Box 7453 1Lofgren’s talents. Phoenix, Ariz. 85011 They did most of the CONTACT LENS WEARERS amount of tim e on keyboards. One guitarist and one keyboard player would probably be 'suf­ ficients unless the three guitarists can learn to play together and complement each other. I have no doubt that Lofgren will eventually come into his own. But for the present, Lofgren is surrounded with an un­ suitable group for his brand of music. CAM PUS CLEAN ERS f t COIN-OP LAUNDROMAT One Day Service on Dry Cleaning & finished Shirts ^ ☆ A lterations ^ Hand Ironing ☆ Suede & Leather Cleaning & F luff D ry • Wash • Dry OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK Phone 967-9650 Corner of University JU N Ç 23 Sportsware Tops »Dresses Celia's Fashions Valley A rt TEMPE CENTER 509 S M ill Ave 'Try Celia's $ 1 .0 0 b e fo re 5 :3 0 M o n .-T h u rs . VURH A O o x . ON THURS, FRI. a jÙ * J * w * - S «WWIIOSSMi» M e m oria l U n n n M o vie House T H U R S . & F R I. 7:00 & 9:30 P .M . TIC K ETS : $1.00 w ith Sum m er I.D . 50c C hildren under 12 $1.50 O thers A dvanceT kJ SPECIAL EVENTS Tubing party and picnic, sponsored by the Committee to Form a Gay Campus Organ­ ization, is scheduled for Sun­ day, June 27. The Committee says this mammoth event is ASU’s gays’ and friends’ contribution to Gay Pride Week. For more information, contact Social Alternatives Committee, 246-8277 (B .J. or Patty) or 968-7174 (Jim ) or write Founders, P.O. Box 117, Tempe, 85281. Wings blend AM and nostalgia Someone finally stopped the screeching feedback in the public address system. The crowd, expectant and exuberant^ began the familar handclapping chant aimed to draw the group onto the stage. Then they flicked off the house lights. Cheers and screaming as Paul McCartney and Wings — dad in silk of white, black and silver — strode onstage, grasped in­ struments and broke into over­ whelmingly loud song. The big beat It was LOUD, painful, deafening — a bit of shock compared to the refined, polished product Paul is putting on the airways these days. Paul's bass was the music’s muscle, overshadowing all other instruments, even the vocals. The address system was inadequate — surprising for such a big ticket operation. Note for note What did they play? Almost every McCartney and Wings AM radio hit — note for note, word for» word. Like “Je t,” “RoD-It,”) “Maybe I’m Amazed,” “Live and Let Die,” “My Love,” ‘T hat’s What the Man Said,” “Silly 'Love Songs,” and “Band on the Run.” And several Beatle songs, in­ cluding ‘T he Long and Winding Road/’ “Lady Madonna,” “Black­ bird,” and, of course, “Yesterday.” The crowd loved every song played, but the Beatles songs got special applause. > • With he warm-dp act, the audience got two hours >of per­ formance for its $8.50, including the tim e betw een *>' two choreographed encores. The sound was brawny, over­ powering — and throughout the concert emphasized the beat. Smoke poured up and bubbles floated down through multi­ colored spotlights. The concert “event” of the year was rolling in Tucson Friday. About halfway between Phoenix and Tucson a road named McCartney Street crosses over the freeway. Under it headed south streamed teenage pop music enthusiasts and older Beatle fans. They joined others waiting at the Community Center. V As doors opened, sw eatThe menu also included, along lubricated fans squirted into the w ith spotlights, smoke and blessedly air conditioned hall. bubbles • mentioned: multicolored “Is that seat taken,” brought blinking lights behind clear panels ÉMBtfie stares. (All seats were in the custom-built stage, various general admission.) backdrops, blinding flashes of light But persistance paid off with a ;a from phosphoresceht powder seat d irectly stage rig h t, ignited during “Live and L et Die,” overlooking Paul's piano. '*• and most unique,, a laser firing i machine-gun bursts of eerie green light then broadcasting fluttering patterns through the man-made haze. Denude Was b est Paul’s sidemen (with the ex­ ception of his sidewoman, Linda) were competent but average rockers. The standout was Dennie Laine — guitar, bass, keyboards — who was fimny and entertaining as well as versatile. But Wings is all Paul^Linda was nice to have onstage, but added nothing musically, contributing a few keyboard chords and a little harmony on vocals. A t least she didn’t do any damage. Paul made the concert, of course. He had as much fun as the audience. Grinning« joking, loosejointed and relaxed as he bopped about the stage, he made “thumbs up” and peace sign gestures to the waving throng. He acted like he cared people had a good time. Most did. AD of those $$$ The band was as jovial as Paul. Nearing thé end of their fabled national tour (now winding up in Los Angeles), the whole group was probably tired, relieved and happy at all the $$$ raked in. Paul’s singing was as good and expressive as ever. He came across best when behind the piano for slow ballads and melodic tunes. A Beatles fan, my favorite song was “Lady Madonna,” which Paul playfully introduced, “You’D have to cast your minds back in the mists of time.” The crowd enjoyed the last rousing chorus so much Paul repeated it. Happy birthday Friday, according to rumor, was Paul’s birthday. Banners, placards and flowers extended the crowd’s best wishes. He shouted “happy birthday” back at them. The concert was a fine example of a modern packaged rock show. Competition for peer status and for recognition from an increasingly gimmick-seeking audience has led pop stars and managers to plot concerts like battle-plans. I miss concerts with an element of the unpredictable, the organic, where something new could be created onstage. AD th a t razzle-dazzle V Of course those who bought tickets heard about the razzledazzle and must have looked forward to it. Others just wanted a glimpse of the most famous Beatle. And if McCartney hadn’t played his hits, many would have been disappointed. The show was a well-mixed formula guaranteed to knock ’em dead. Professional but shaDow, powerful but plainly predictable. P a tD en ley June 2 4 ,1 9 7 6 Sum m er S tate Press Page 9 Expert claims économies blocks solar energy use An Iranian solar energy perfecting solar products expert doing research at which he believes can be ASU says economics rather useful right now. than technology is the Among these items: primary stumbling block to — A small portable solar use of th e sun as a autoclave which can be significant energy alter­ carried to remote sites by native. medical teams to sterilize “There are some technical their instruments when problems still to be solved, they are far from modern but the main drawback to hospital facilities; using solar energy is — a one-kilowatt solar economic. The high cost of pump to bring water out of solar equipment and the th e ground and onto comparatively low cost of cultivated areas as conventional energy is irrigation for small farms in keeping major companies Iran’s désert regions, which from pursuingsolar to try to “are even shorter of water make it competitive,“ ac­ than Arizona.” Bahadori already holds a cording to -Dr. Mehdi N. Bahadori, director of the patent on the autoclave and solar energy center at says Pahlavi University is Pahlavi U niversity in trying to interest private companies in mass Shiraz, Iran. The ^ fact th a t large producing it for sale to companies are shying away medical personnel in the from production of solar world’s, developing coun­ apparatus contributes not tries. Having access to ASUs only to its high initial cost, but also raises questions Solar Energy Collection in about its reliability. — Hayden library on campus “There are only very limited has greatly helped the performance guarantees on banian’s research effort: solar equipment right now” “It’s one of the best — if not — and therefore about its the best — collections of solar energy materials in salability, Bahadori said. The banian admits that the world.’’ He has consulted with those facts serve as an solar research team effective deterrent to solar energy use; even for members from ASU, the someone asgknowledgeable UofA and other Schools; and convinced of its worth with business and industry representatives; and with as is he. “About three years ago talented students pursuing when my own house was degrees in solar energybeing built, even with all the related fields. He has been particularly interest and faith I have in solar energy, I just couldn't surprised by the surge of see using it. Natural gas interest in solar energy was available, more con­ since he first visited ASU in 1970-71: “Such gener«! venient and cheaper." It is that condition, he interest .didn’t exist five claims, which must change years ago, and now it is before solar energy can become an important force S ta te P ress in the world’s energy pic­ ture. N ew s The scientist, who came to ASU via a. $22,500 grant N e w N u m b e r: under the National Science Foundation's Senior Foreign 965-2292 Energy Scholars program, spent much of his year here researching, designing and ENGINEERING ( GRADUATES Interesting assignments are avail­ able to BS a n d /o r MS graduates with majors in ME; EE; AE; or. Computer Science. Contact your placement office or submit your resume to; generating the potential to. solve most of the problems pertaining to solar utilization,” he said. - Solar interest in b an is running high, too, even though the country has substantial oil supplies. “The government has determined that the best use for the ml may be in the petrochemical and phar­ maceutical industries rather than as fuel fof burning, so it is very interested in solar and other energy alter­ natives,” Bahadori said. The Iranian scholar, leaving ABU this week, will tour the U.S. and Canada for about a month, lecturing on solar topics. He then will fly to Europe to present his research findings — and an overview of Iranian solar technology — before several professional groups before he finally arrives home in Shiraz in September. Mr. E. N. Bailor, Employment Manager GENERAL DYNAMICS C o n v a ir D iv isio n P.O .Box 80847 San Diego, CA 92138 An Equal Opportunity Employer M /F 35MM CAMERA OWNERS SAVE UP TO 50% ON YOUR FILM PURCHASES & PROCESSING Let us send you a 20 exp. ro ll o f our Eastman Kodak Color Negative F ilm fo r Sl.OO.That's righ t $1.00. No gim m icks, no joke. The $1.00 le t’s us know you ow n a 35MM So C’mon fill o u t the coupon below, p u t it in an envelope w ith S I.00 and drop it in you r closest m ailbox. As soon as we receive NEW ARRIVALS PLEASE O N LY ONE ROLL TO A CUSTOME R M A K E E V ER L ABO R A T O R IE S LT D P O Box 3891 1 H o lly w o o d , Ca. 900 38 (213) 322 1001 c&4ÌÙm £ fM ved y /// fâm*/ iW 4 r- N ew Optometrist Office Near ASU Located in "Good food G D rink‘ Live E ntertainm ent iw ry Friday, Setwrdey l S- dey m i AM N o M in .- N o Cover Apache Plaza Lig ht & D ark Beer on Top 1000 E. Apache EMvd. No. 117 —W in e — Tempe, AZ. - —C arryouts— Happy Hour Mon. Ihre Fri. 3 te 6 p.m. Vi Gel. Pitchers, -, Across from Sun Devil Lounge 1 5 % STUDENT DISCOUNT $1.50 Megs 35c U n ive rsity & Forest (In The Arches) 966-771« - Tempe or« M HT 1 I:M M l t* 11 M, Sat.tfc*. liMaa 994-1833 Dr. C. G. Tatham Dr. Barry S. Herndon gfigf Page. 10 Summer State Press June 24,1976 ASU swimmer qualifies for Olympic Team B y John D ougherty An ASU student and a form er student both qualified for the U .S. Olympic Team during the Olympic Swimming Trials in Long Beach CA, last weekend. Maryan ne Grâham, 20, from Mesa, finished first in the women’s 200 meter backstroke while Melissa Belote, 19, from Springfield, ' VA, finished second to Graham in the same event. Graham set an American record of 2:17.39 in thé event breaking Belote’s old mark of 2:18.16. The race was between the two the whole way with Belote leading until the final 50 m eters. G rsham edged Belote by 1.4 seconds to earn her first trip to the Olympics.' Graham quit school last December to tra in in California for the Olympic tria ls. Graham joined another . form er ASU student, Peggy Tosdal, in Mission Viejo, CA, to swim under coach Mark Schubert. Belote is a sophomore majoring in recreation. She practiced with the ASU men’s swimming team and her coach for the Olympic trials was the ASU men’s coach, Ron Johnson. Belote led the women’s swim team to a fifth place finish at the AIAW Swimming Cham­ pionships earlier this year. Two other ASU students also competed in the trials. Duncan S cott, a law student, competed in the 200 .meter butterfly. Pam Rogers, 19, finished fourth in the 100 meter breast- Law o f averages responsible for A SU 's baseball fade-out It's been nearly a week now since Arizona State fell to the UofA Wildcats — a team they had beaten seven out of seven tim es before — and was eliminated from the College World Series. guys deserved it.” But personally Td rather the And then outloud 111 say, “U layr of averages beat the D evils. . . or for that m atter anything or were lucky. . . ” team other than Arizona beat them. I REAR ENGINES Ltd. | Someone at a party Saturday night told me he was glad to see Discount Pert»—Service £ the UofA win, if ASU couldn’t. I VW-P0RSCHE | And ever since Friday night’s 5-1 loss. I’ve been looking for a | VW tune-up 19” J Not me. scapegoat to blame for ASU's not But it’s only a game, in a coming away from the tour­ Parts €r OH Included nament in Omaha as national somewhat petty rivalry, right? | Rebuilt engines from $170 | And this is college sports . . . champs — which, like every ASU fan, I felt the Sun Devils and college sports should have $ 504N . CENTER, MESA $ deserved . . . and the UofA didn’t the element of sportsmanship.” So IH be a good sport and say deserve. HCongratulations, UofA. You And after nearly a week, I’ve finally found a scapegoat (besides the Wildcat baseball team): none other than an old, archaic, an­ tiquated rule of college baseball. I 833-3670 | COOL SHADE This is one rule, however, you can’t blame the NCAA for. It’s called the law of averages. Simply stated the law of averages says: If two great college baseball teams play enough times, sooner or later the less great team is bound to win. It was this law, you see, not the Wildcats, that beat ASU. . . Of course nothing could be farther from the truth. The law of averages didn’t hold the best hitting team in college baseball history to four hits and one run, or hand an undefeated pitcher (Don Hanna, 15-0) his first loss, or score five runs. It was pitcher Steve Powers and his UofA teammates who did all that, and who went on to win the national title the next evening. (-*■: continued page 11 Classified Ads Travel INTERCONTINENTAL TRAVEL Service offers the lowest Jet feree to Europe, Aela, Africa, South Am erica. Eurail passes, etc. 107 Girard Blvd., SE, Suite L, Albuquerque, NM . (9 0S) 255- 6 8 3 0 . -------------1 ' W ★ Automobiles 1975 CAMARO. Yellow, atlck shift, refrig­ eration, etereo and taire, like new, only 11,000 m ilee. 959-5237. 6-24 ★ ★ Help Wanted STUDENTS W ITH suspected hearing loss to serve in auditory perception experim ent. Approx. 10 hours/week at $3/hour. Call 965-7287. 8-5 T10U SE PARENTS W W s ~ residential treatm ent center. $10,000 a year 963-8139. 7-8 MAKE EXTRA dollars on your own tim e. Sell attractive pet Identification tags. Carol 839-4391._______________________ 7-15 EARN $250 in spare tim e! Details: Send SASE to: Calm s, 1522 Alberta Street, Dayton, Ohio 46409. 7-15 W ork Wanted $250 HOUSE SITTER. Reliable, experienced teenager w ill tend your lawn, pool etc. w hile you vacation. References. Please phone Ted 966-3328 between 6:30 a.m . and 6:00 a.m . or 5:30 p.m . and 7:30 p.m . TOUGH HOUSEHOLD job? Strong, reliable, experienced teenager w ill pitch in. Wash windows, clean carport, shampoo carpets, whatever. References. Please phone Ted 966-3328 between 6:30 a.m . and 8:00 a.m . or 5:30 p.m . and 7:30 p.m . STUFFING 1000 ENVELOPES. HOMEWORK: Guaranteed!! Companies Need You. Details: $1, Self-addressed, Stamped Envelope: Johnson-6X147,253Atwood, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. g_24 ★ Services ★ Personal ★ T yp in g EXPERIENCED IN all areas of student typing, near ASU. Dabby 967-2305 or Patti 967-4937.___________________________ 8-5 TYPING, FAST, accurate. Five years ex­ perience. Reasonable rates. Call 273-6738. ___________________________________ 8-5 NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Work guaranteed. 7 years experience. 967- 8155. 8-5 10' X 10' ÂWNIN6 -- —1 SPEEDY ACCURATE elite or pica. Disser­ tations, theses, term papers. Near campus. Call Jane 968-9828. 8-5 ★ For Rent/Lease WESTSIOE TRAILER park. Five m inute walk to campus. $95 mo. Gas, w ater paid. 968- 0270. 6-24 WALK TO spacious carpeted refrig, apartments. Pool, laundry facilities, BBQ, parking. 966-2156,967-1677, Art. 8-24 Only *I99S ALSOSAVEON TARPS, PARACHUTES MÔSQUITO NETS, ETC. CHECKERBOARD ARMY & NAVY STORES 1126 W. MAIN MESA 034-7047 ★ Instruction IUTORING BY junior English m ajor In 101, 1 02,103, 312, and 321. Reasonable rates, Laura 947-0214.__________ 7-1 ACTING FOR camera Intensive Workshop, $50,996-5749. 7-8 NEVER GO hungry) Lose weight real­ istically like the skiers do. Send one dollar to Ski Team, 10203 Santa M onica Blvd. 303A, Los Angeles, CA 00067. 7-29 MATH TUTORING, avoid crisis now. Experienced part-tim e college professor. Small groups OK. 838-4038. 8-5 HAPPY SWEET sixteen. Have you ever been kissed? Happy Birthday June 30. Randy Paul H , For Sale * SELECTED STYLES V4 o ff ladies sandals. Back Door Shop. 707 South Forest, Temps. iHaôsooDkfflori APARTMENTS Next to the Firehouse Restaurant 1617 Apache Boulevard Tempo, Arizona 85281 Phone (602)968-2616 / COtDRTV P0ÖI SAUNA' I UTILITIES, Furnished One Bedrooms - Studios 62 UNITS 21 ONE BEDROOMS — 41 STUDIOS 1974 MOBILE home, 12x60, for the discernible. Set In older adult park between shaded trees — 2 bdrm, one bath, two window a ir conditioners, skirting, awning, storage shed, fenced-in area, com pletely furnished, R&O, regrigerator, etc. $7200. Phone Bob 945-6812.________________ 6-24 6 TYPES of draft beer,-only 25c a mug; Thurs., Fri. and Sat. Bushwacker’s. South side of Danelle Plaza (S.W . com er o f M ill and Southern) 967-5642._____________ 6-24 FURNISH KD O N * M OROOM S • STUDIOS NICE, CLEAN m obile home for the couple or individual w ith modest means. Set up In fam ily park, 2 m iles from ASU. 12x44, one bedroom, bath, refrigerator, R&O, car­ peted, skirting, awnings, storage shed, evap. cooler . . . $3800. Phone Bob 945-8812. 6-24 BUTLER'S , LOOKING FOR Iqw cost jet fares with reliable service? Need Inform ation on international travel? Let Intercontinental Travel Service assist you. 107 Girard Blvd., SE, Suite L, Albuquerque, NM 87106. (505) 255-6630. 8-5 TUTORING M ATH, Statistics, Chem istry, Physics and Fortran Programming. Call 838-3374.__________________________ 7-29 ★ \M In 1972 at Munich, Belote was 15 years old, on her first trip out of the country. Her inexperience didn’t hurt as she set three world records and won three gold medals. She had reached the State Press ★ Sour grapes too By Tom Gibbon stroke, just missing the team. For Graham it is her first trip to the Olympics. But for Belote, it is a second trip to the games. It will be very hard for Belote to top what she did in the 1972 Olym­ pics. Used Furniture • A ntiques Buy • S ell • Trade Student Discount on Reg. Price 225 W . U nlv. 968-6800 ★ Real Estate Sale TOW NHOUSE, 2 story, 2 bedroom, large master bedroom, carpets, drapes, refrig, disposal, brick patio; 4 blocks north of Southern on Alm a School Road. $21,000 or $3000 CTM. 834-5532. _________ 6-24 ★ W anted GRADUATE NURSING student wants to rent sm all house for tw o years. Dog OK. Near campus for bike. Decent price. Good karm a. Late Ju ly/E arly August. References. Please call collect 402-342-2640 after 5 pm or w rite M .L. Haberman, 1110 So. 30th Ave. #6, Omaha, Nebr. 08105. 7-15 i ____ _ __________ _ THE GIRL w ith the b e*t legs, wins cash prize. Ladles beer only 10c. a mug. Bushwacksr’s. South side of Danelle Plaza (S.W . com er of M ill end Southern) 9675542.______________ ___________ 6-24 Red Cross. The Good Neighbor. V \ _____________June 2 4 ,1 9 7 6 Sum m er S tate Press Page 11 Environmental workshop Thirty talented high school students from all parts of the country will begin a summer workshop in environm ental studies Monday at ASU. . The six-week program is funded by ‘a $16,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. The session, strongly emphssizing laboratory and field work, will operate the-first two • weeks at ASU’s Laboratory of Climatology. It will concentrate on problems concerning urban and desert environments, Basically th e six-w eek .workshop introduces th e students to qualitative and quantitative aspects and environm ental m easurem ents focusing on air, w ater, and soils, They will also enjoy a five-day trip, into the Grand Canyon, visit Glen Canyon and Navajo power plants, and participate in th e annual Governor's Advisory Commission w orkshop on Arizona environment. If ever you see a suspicious character — some guy hanging around a bike rack or lurking by a dorm — call the University Police at 3456. No names necessary. And no victimless crimes, please. Call 3456 Melissa Belote, sophomore recreation major, takes (Heather after a race at the AAU National Championships In April. Belote earned a trip to Montreal with the U.S. Olympic team by qualifying last weekend at trials in Long Beach, Calif. MUEHLEISEN COURTS M ore about Swimmer makes Olympics continued from page 10 pinnacle of success. The following years brought a world cham­ pionship in Belgrade in 1973, th ree national championships in 1973, and trips to London, Paris, Brem en, W. Germ any, Sofia, Bulgaria, Belgrade, Monaco and now a trip to Montreal. But, in 1974 Belote’s glory was interrupted and a struggle bade to the top began. That summer Belote suffered a ruptured ovarian cyst that forced her out of com petition for four months. A t the same time the East Germans emerged as the dominate power in women’s swimming. Belote’s world record of 2:19.19, set at the Munich Olympics in the 200 meter backstroke, was lowered to 2:15.45 in 1975 by an Blast German. Still, no American girl had come dose to Belote’s time. Belote then failed to make the world championship team in June 1975 after being the first seed in both the 100 meter and 200 meter backstroke. In two short years Belote had fallen from the top. Belote said after missing the world championship team, “Just wait for the nationals in Kansas City in August (1975). HI be back.” She wasn’t kidding as she won the 200 m eter backstroke for her first national championship since 1973, establishing an American record of 2:13.16. “Actually, only one meet every four years really m atters and that »is the Olympic trials,’’ Belote said. “The Olympic trials have more pressure than the Olympic Games them ­ selves.” Times recorded at the trials reflected the pressure as five world records and 13 American records were set during the six-day meet. The tension at the trials effected both Belote and Graham. Graham had qualified first for the finals in the 100 meter backstroke but placed sixth and failed to make the Olympic team. In the 200 meter backstroke Belote had qualified first with Graham second for the finals. Belote became a victim of the pressure and swam a poor race, but still finished Come Into STANDARD OPTICAL You’ll Like What You See! Los Arcos Trl City 10% Tower Plaza South Plaza Christown Valley West Mall Metro Center 10% Student Discount at - STANDARD OPTICAL second. The pressure helped Graham this time and she set her American record. Belote and Graham are now in West Point, New York for a three-week train in g camp before leaving for Montreal July 12. Belote’s coach, Ron Johnson, said Belote has a good chance for a medal in Montreal. Financial support for athletes trying for the Olympic team is sparse. 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